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All your positions held today are waiting for the same deadline: tonight at 23:44.
It's not an options settlement, not a Fed meeting. It's Trump's final ultimatum to Iran.
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This conflict started on February 28th, and it's been 22 days of fighting to date.
The Strait of Hormuz—approximately 20% of global crude oil passes through here daily. It's essentially blocked now. The IEA's terminology: "the most severe energy crisis in decades."
Brent crude at $112, up 50% since the war began.
Last night Trump posted on Truth Social: Iran must fully open the strait, or he will "strike and destroy" Iran's largest power station. The window given is 48 hours—the deadline is tonight at 23:44 GMT.
Iran's IRGC responded: the strait is "permanently closed" until Iran's destroyed infrastructure is rebuilt. They say this process will take years.
This isn't two countries negotiating. These are two positions that cannot simultaneously be true.
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The market is currently pricing in "some form of escalation." But there's a meaningful gap between "pricing in escalation" and "escalation actually happening."
Looking at three markets' reactions today reveals something odd.
Crude at $112—understood. With a 22-day blockade and 11 million barrels lost daily, this price isn't surprising.
BTC at $68,000, fear and greed index at 15, retail in extreme panic. Yet US spot ETFs have seen nearly $7 billion in net inflows this month. Institutions are buying; retail is scared.
Gold dropped 3.3% today; futures fell 5%.
This last one is most counterintuitive. On the tensest day of war, gold gets hammered.
The reason isn't complex: war heats up → inflation expectations rise → Fed turns hawkish → dollar strengthens → gold comes under pressure. This chain of logic lags behind the textbook "war = buy gold" by half a step, but it's more real.
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Oil says: supply is already disrupted; prices reflect reality.
BTC says: retail is watching the event; institutions are watching the cycle.
Gold says: a strong dollar is worth more than war.
All three statements point to the same time point.
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I'm not adding to any positions before this deadline expires.
The reason: whichever direction it goes, the first hour after tonight's expiration has the largest information gap—but also the most fakes. True direction confirmation usually comes 2–4 hours later. Once emotional positions are shaken out, what remains is true pricing.
If the strait opens: crude could fall maximally, the dollar weakens, and BTC and gold have potential for synchronized rebounds. This is a breather for risk assets.
If the strikes happen: crude could surge short-term, possibly breaking through $120. BTC could drop another 8–12% due to liquidity crush—but that $7 billion from institutions hasn't stopped, and the cycle logic won't disappear from a single strike.
In either scenario, I'm not the first one in.
The first one in makes luck. The one who enters 2 hours later makes judgment.
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Tonight at 23:44, just watch. No need to stand guard.